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The Trivers-Willard theory proposes that the sex ratio of offspring should vary with maternal condition when it has sex-specific influences on offspring fitness. In particular, mothers in good condition in polygynous and dimorphic species are predicted to produce an excess of sons, whereas mothers in poor condition should do the opposite. Despite the elegance of the theory, support for it has been limited. Here we extend and generalize the Trivers-Willard theory to explain the disparity between predictions and observations of offspring sex ratio. In polygynous species, males typically have higher mortality rates, different age-specific reproductive schedules and more risk-prone life history tactics than females; however, these differences are not currently incorporated into the Trivers-Willard theory. Using two-sex models parameterized with data from free-living mammal populations with contrasting levels of sex differences in demography, we demonstrate how sex differences in life history traits over the entire lifespan can lead to a wide range of sex allocation tactics, and show that correlations between maternal condition and offspring sex ratio alone are insufficient to conclude that mothers adaptively adjust offspring sex ratio.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/nature14968

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nature

Publication Date

08/10/2015

Volume

526

Pages

249 - 252

Keywords

Adaptation, Biological, Aging, Animals, Behavior, Animal, Female, Male, Models, Biological, Mortality, Mothers, Reproducibility of Results, Reproduction, Risk-Taking, Sciuridae, Sex Characteristics, Sex Ratio, Sheep